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Workers are being monitored, and there is no risk to the public, CDC says

The leader of one of the labs linked to an accidental anthrax exposure at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been reassigned, CDC spokesman Tom Skinner says.

Skinner would not confirm the name of the person who was reassigned.

Skinner said the agency is still investigating how as many as 86 Atlanta-based workers were possibly exposed to anthrax. The workers are being monitored and provided antibiotics.

"Based on most of the potential exposure scenarios, the risk of infection is very low," the agency said in a statement last week.

"CDC believes that other CDC staff, family members, and the general public are not at risk of exposure and do not need to take any protective action."

Early reports showed that a lab did not adequately inactivate samples, which were then moved and used for experimentation in three laboratories not equipped to handle live Bacillus anthracis, or anthrax.

Believing the samples were inactivated, workers in those labs did not don adequate protective equipment, the CDC said.

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Sometime between then and June 6, procedures in two of the three labs may have aerosolized the spores, the CDC said. Hallway and lab areas were decontaminated.

There are three types of anthrax infection: cutaneous (through the skin), inhalation (through the lungs) and gastrointestinal (through digestion).

Early symptoms can suggest the flu.

"In the worst-case scenarios, literally, within a day or two of exposure, if you've inhaled spores and if they are very lethal, one begins to get -- as they say -- the standard flu symptoms -- high fever, malaise," said Leonard Cole, a bioterrorism expert. "You get lazy. You feel sick. You get headaches. You get bone aches.

"And then after a day or two, in the worst case, if you don't get treatment, it could be lethal for you, and beyond treatment," he said.

The CDC said disciplinary action, as necessary, will be taken. The agency will also review safety protocol with employees.

The FBI is aware of the incident and coordinating with officials at the CDC as they investigate, said FBI spokesman Christopher Allen.

"It is CDC's obligation to ensure that people feel safe and are safe in the workplace and the community as we conduct our life-saving laboratory work. We will report findings of this investigation and all steps we take to improve lab-safety processes as a result of this incident," the agency's statement said.